An analysis and performance considerations for John Harbison's Concerto for oboe, clarinet, and strings

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Abstract

John Harbison is an award-winning and prolific American composer. He
has written for almost every conceivable genre of concert performance with
styles ranging from jazz to pre-classical forms. The focus of this study, his
Concerto for Oboe, Clarinet, and Strings, was premiered in 1985 as a product of
a Consortium Commission awarded by the National Endowment of the Arts. The
initial discussions for the composition were with oboist Sara Bloom and clarinetist
David Shifrin. Harbison’s Concerto for Oboe, Clarinet, and Strings allows the
clarinet to finally be introduced to the concerto grosso texture of the Baroque
period, for which it was born too late.
This document includes biographical information on John Harbison
including his life and career, compositional style, and compositional output. It
also contains a brief history of the Baroque concerto grosso and how it relates to
the Harbison concerto. There is a detailed set-class analysis of each movement
and information on performance considerations. The two performers as well as
the composer were interviewed to discuss the commission, premieres, and
theoretical/performance considerations for the concerto.

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